All Stories

  1. Institutions as a Philosophical Problem: A Critical Rationalist Perspective on Guala’s “Understanding Institutions” and His Critics
  2. The Limited Rationality of Technology
  3. Toward a Fictionless Liberalism
  4. The re-inventor's dilemma: a tragedy of the public domain
  5. Book Review: How Reason Almost Lost Its Mind: The Strange Case of Cold War Rationality, by Paul Ericson, Judy L. Klein, Lorraine Daston, Rebecca Lemov, Thomas Sturm, and Michael D. GordinEricsonPaulKleinJudy L.DastonLorraineLemovRebeccaSturmThomasGordi...
  6. Book Review: The Unique in Popper’s Contribution to Philosophy by Alexander NaranieckiNaranieckiAlexanderReturning to Karl Popper: A reassessment of his politics and philosophy, Amsterdam, The Netherlands: Krit Rat, Rodopi, 2014. viii+183 pp. ISBN-13: ...
  7. Einstein’s Philosophy Politely Shelved
  8. Physics and Philosophy
  9. The Role of Historians of Science in Contemporary Society
  10. Experts within Democracy
  11. Honesty Still Is the Best PolicyFullerSteveThe Sociology of Intellectual Life: The Career of the Mind in and around the Academy. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage, 2009. vi + 174 pp.
  12. Gasping for Perspective
  13. Introducing Philosophy of Social ScienceRosenbergAlexanderPhilosophy of Social Science, fourth edition. Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 2012. Pp. xi + 310. $40 (paper).
  14. Meaning: from Parmenides to Wittgenstein: Philosophy as “Footnotes to Parmenides”
  15. The Hazard Called Education by Joseph Agassi
  16. Last Word
  17. Popper and His Popular Critics
  18. Kuhn’s Way
  19. Imre Lakatos
  20. Feyerabend’s Proposal
  21. Educating Elites in Democratic Societies
  22. On Mathematics Education
  23. The Autonomous Student
  24. Science Education Without Pressure
  25. The Preaching of John Holt
  26. Letter to Diane
  27. Duhem, Quine and Kuhn, and Incommensurability
  28. Rules Against Excessive Defensiveness
  29. On Human Rules About God’s World
  30. In Search for Rules
  31. Karl Raimund Popper (1902–1994)
  32. Rules Against Mock-Criticism
  33. The Essential Popper
  34. A Touch of Malice
  35. Epilogue: Civilization and Its Self-defense
  36. Paul Feyerabend and Rational Pluralism
  37. University President as Gun-Slinger 2: Review of Straight Shooting
  38. The Master Relationship: Review of Warwick, Andrew, Masters of Theory
  39. The Myth of the Young Genius
  40. Mathematical Education as Training for Freedom
  41. Training to Survive the Hazard Called Education
  42. The Future of (Science) Higher Education
  43. Disseminating Education for the Democratic Way of Life Now
  44. Planning for Science and Science Education
  45. University President as Gun-Slinger 1: Academic Democracy Threatened
  46. The Injury of Science Text Books: Review Essay of Michael Matthews, Science Teaching
  47. To Reform Higher Education: Towards a Manifesto
  48. Kuhn on Pluralism and Incommensurability
  49. Against the Bouncers at the Gates of Science
  50. Lakatos on the Methodology of Scientific Research Programs
  51. Top schools: Review of D. Reynolds, B. Creemers, S. Stringfield, C. Teddlie, and G. Schaffer, eds., World Class Schools
  52. Rituals to Block the Reform of Education, Review of Jerome S. Bruner’s, the Process of Education
  53. Bunge NeverthelessBungeMarioPolitical Philosophy: Fact, Fiction and Vision. New Brunswick NJ: Transaction Publications, 2009. Pp. x + 424.
  54. Book Review: Tacit and Explicit KnowledgeCollinsHarryTacit and Explicit Knowledge. Chicago: Chicago University Press, 2010. xi + 182 pp. ISBN 978-0-226-11308-7.
  55. The Very Idea of Modern Science
  56. « Individualisme institutionnel » (1975)
  57. « L’individualisme institutionnel » (1975) Traduit par Hervé Charmettant et Julien Reysz*
  58. Prejudices of the Senses
  59. Bacon’s Influence
  60. The Riddle of Bacon
  61. Bacon’s Philosophy of Discovery
  62. The Inductive Style
  63. Mechanism
  64. Ellis’ Major Difficulty
  65. Philosophical Background
  66. Prejudices of Opinions
  67. Bacon on the Origin of Error and Prejudice
  68. The Social Background of Classical Science
  69. The New Doctrine of Prejudice
  70. Conclusion: The Rise of the Riddle of Bacon
  71. The Function of the Doctrine of Prejudice
  72. Boyle in the Eyes of Posterity
  73. The Missing Link Between Bacon and the Royal Society
  74. We Socratic Philosophers Know that We Know NothingGuttingGaryWhat Philosophers Know: Case Studies in Recent Analytic PhilosophyNew York: Cambridge University Press, 2009. 264 pp. $30.99 (hardcover).
  75. The Manhattan Project and Its Long ShadowShapinStevenThe Scientific Life: A Moral History of a Late Modern VocationChicago and London: Chicago University Press, 2008. 439 pp. $29.00.
  76. Between the Under-Labourer and the Master-Builder: Observations on Bunge’s Method
  77. On the Reliability of ScienceMayoDeborah G.SpanosAris, eds. Error and Inference: Recent Exchanges on Experimental reasoning, Reliability, and the Objectivity and Rationality of Science. New York, Cambridge University Press, 2010. xvii + 409 pp. $65.00 ...
  78. Better a Bang than a WhimperMillerSeumasThe Moral Foundations of Social Institutions: A Philosophical Study. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009. x + 356 pp. ISBN: 978-0-521-76794-1.
  79. Contemporary European Philosophy, After Half-a-Century
  80. Łukasiewicz and Popper on Induction
  81. From Popper’s Literary Remains
  82. To Dismiss “The Received View”McGrewTimothyAlspector-KellyMarcAllhoffFritz, editors Philosophy of Science: An Historical AnthologyChichester, UK: Wiley-Blackwell, 2009. 680 pp. ₤64.00 (hardcover), ₤24.99 (paperback).
  83. P03-18 - Diagnosis of psychosis
  84. Current Philosophy of Science
  85. Science as Commodities
  86. In Wittgenstein’s Shadow
  87. The Advantage of Theft over Honest Toil
  88. Book Review: Harmon, J. E., and Gross, A. G. (Eds.). (2007). The Scientific Literature: A Guided Tour. Chicago: the Chicago University Press
  89. Turner on Merton
  90. Popper's Insights into the State of Economics
  91. On the decline of scientific societies
  92. Nicholas  Maxwell, Is Science Neurotic? London: Imperial College Press (2004), 228 pp., $60.00 (cloth).
  93. Book Review: Stadler, F., and Fischer, K. R., editors. (2006). Paul Feyerabend: ein Philosoph aus Wien. Vienna: Springer
  94. Book Review: Warwick, Andrew. (2003). Masters of Theory: Cambridge and the Rise of Mathematical Physics. Chicago and London: Chicago University Press
  95. Science and its History
  96. Einstein und die Wissenschaftslehre
  97. Towards an Historiography of Science
  98. Historiographic essays
  99. Historical Essays
  100. Philosophy from a Skeptical Perspective
  101. Chroniclers in the Courts of Science: Preliminary Essays on the Traditions and the History of Science
  102. On the Ethics of Medical Care under Resource Constraints
  103. Imagination and reason
  104. Educating Elites in Democratic Societies: A Dialogue
  105. Slaves in Plato's Laws
  106. The changing features of the body-mind problem
  107. What Collapse, Exactly?
  108. Book Review: The Intellectual
  109. The biology of the interest in money
  110. Chapter 7: Joseph Agassi, Philosophy of Technology, and Mass Movements
  111. Back to the Drawing Board
  112. Popper and the establishment
  113. Beyond Wittgenstein's poker: New light on Popper and Wittgenstein
  114. Heidegger Made Simple (and Offensive)
  115. Book reviews
  116. Newell's list
  117. Irrationalism with a Human Face
  118. The Theory and Practice of Critical Rationalism
  119. Science and Culture
  120. Artificial Intelligence
  121. Rationalizing Politics
  122. Bloodletting
  123. Science and Art
  124. The Critique of Linearity
  125. The Politics of Science
  126. Validation
  127. Science and Pluralism
  128. The Consolations of Science
  129. Science, and Commonsense
  130. Philosophy without Science
  131. The Siblinghood of Humanity
  132. Wild Goose Chase
  133. The Inner World
  134. Science and Philosophy
  135. Irrationalism Today
  136. Science and Controversy
  137. The Two Books
  138. Science and Technology
  139. Science, Politics and Objectivity
  140. Science and the Interpersonal
  141. Comparability and incommensurability
  142. Faith in the Open Society: The End of Hermeneutics
  143. Science and Its Public Relations
  144. Technology as Both Science and Art
  145. The Moral Base of Science, or, the Architectonic of Open-Ended Reason
  146. Science and the Call of the Wild
  147. Progress in Science and in Art
  148. Science as a Public Enterprise
  149. Minimal Criteria for Intellectual Progress
  150. Science as Training for Autonomy
  151. For Public Responsibility for Spaceship Earth
  152. The Functions of Intellectual Rubbish
  153. Science Fiction: This Message is for You. Maybe
  154. Science and the Detective Novel
  155. Kuhn’s Way
  156. A Touch of Malice
  157. The Disorder of Things
  158. How Ignoring Repeatability Leads to Magic
  159. Maimonides in Context
  160. The Disorder of Things
  161. Book Review: The Rhetoric of Science
  162. Knowledge Personal or Social
  163. Book Review : Shlomo Deshen, Charles S. Liebman, and Moshe Shokeid, eds., Israeli Judaism: The Sociology of Religion in Israel, Studies of Israeli Society, Volume VII. Transaction Publishers, New Brunswick, NJ, 1995. Pp. xiv + 386. $44.95 (cloth), $24....
  164. Review Essay : To Salvage Neurath JOSEPH AGASSI Tel-Aviv University and York University, Toronto Nancy Cartwright, Jordi Cat, Lola Fleck, and Thomas E. Uebel, Otto Neurath: Philosophy between Science and Politics. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge,...
  165. Celebrating The Open Society
  166. Book Reviews : Michael Gibbon, Camille Limoges, Helga Nowotny, Simon Schwatrzman, Peter Scott, and Martin Trow, The New Production of Knowledge: The Dynamics of Science and Research in Contemporary Societies. London, Sage, 1994, reprinted 1995. Pp. ix ...
  167. Review Essays : Truth, Trust, and Gentlemen Shapin on Boyle JOSEPH AGASSI Tel-Aviv University and York University, Toronto Steven Shapin, A Social History of Truth: Civility and Science in Seventeenth-Century England. Chicago University Press, Chicago,...
  168. Thought, Action and Scientific Technology
  169. Blame Not the Laws of Nature
  170. Summary of AFOS Workshop, 1994
  171. Who Needs Aristotle?
  172. Thought, Action and Scientific Technology
  173. Book reviews
  174. The place of metaphysics in the historiography of science
  175. Book reviews
  176. Summary of AFOS workshop, 1994
  177. Blame not the laws of nature
  178. Epistemological and Methodological Concerns of Feminist Social Scientists
  179. The Theory and Practice of Critical Rationalism
  180. Contemporary Philosophy of Science as a Thinly Masked Antidemocratic Apologetics
  181. An Inductivist Version of Critical Rationalism
  182. Theocratic pluralism is impossible
  183. Gadamer Without Tears
  184. Myth, Rhetoric, and the Voice of Authority; a Critique of Frazer, Eliot, Frye, and Campbell.
  185. Book Reviews : John H. Fielder and Douglas Birch, eds., The DC-10 Case: A Study in Applied Ethics, Technology and Society. SUNY Press, Albany, 1992. Pp. 346. $12.95 (paper
  186. Book reviews
  187. Avoiding the posts: Reply to Friedman
  188. On the definition of life
  189. The Philosophy of Optimism and Pessimism
  190. Review Essays : Phenomenology of Technology
  191. Diagnosis
  192. Radiation Theory and the Quantum Revolution
  193. Radiation Theory
  194. The Changing Scenery
  195. The Rise of Spectroscopy
  196. Kirchhoff’s Law
  197. The Background to Radiation Theory
  198. The Background to Quantum Theory
  199. Rationality: A comment on Raymond Boudon's paper
  200. Book Reviews : John W. Murphy and John T. Pardeck, eds., Technology and Human Productivity: Challenges for the Future. Quorum Books, New York, 1986. Pp. xx, 236, $37.95
  201. False Prophecy Versus True Quest A Modest Challenge to Contemporary Relativists
  202. Book Reviews : David L. Collinson, David Knights and Margaret Collinson: Managing to Discriminate 1990, London and New York: Routledge. 251 pages
  203. Book Reviews : David Gooding, Trevor Pinch, and Simon Schaffer, eds., The Uses of Experiment: Studies in the Natural Sciences. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1989. Pp. xvii, 467, £50 (cloth), £19.50 (paper
  204. The Second Generation: Continuity and Change in the Kibbutz.
  205. Rationality: Philosophical and social aspects
  206. Heuristic computer‐assisted, not computerized: Comments on Simon's Project
  207. The Rise of the Ideas of the Welfare State
  208. Book‐reviews
  209. Bye-Bye, Weber
  210. Wittgenstein and Physicalism
  211. As You Like It
  212. Functional integration
  213. Global Responsibility
  214. Book reviews
  215. Academic democracy threatened — the case of Boston University
  216. Book reviews
  217. Diagnosis: Philosophical and Medical Perspectives
  218. The Human Factor
  219. Introduction
  220. Diagnostic Theory
  221. Systems and Medicine
  222. Diagnostic Practice
  223. The Computer Revolution in Medicine
  224. The Problem Situation and Its Context
  225. Ethics of Diagnostic Systems
  226. Conclusion: The Future of The Diagnostic Service
  227. Some Interfaces of Medical Diagnosis
  228. Induction and Stochastic Independence
  229. The role of the philosopher among the scientists: Nuisance or necessity?
  230. Symposium on the role of the philosopher among the scientists: Nuisance or necessity? A reply to Baigrie
  231. THEORIES OF GENDER EQUALITY:
  232. Book Reviews : Francis Bacon and Modernity. By Charles Whitney. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1986. Pp. x + 226. $18.50
  233. The Lark and the Tortoise
  234. Technology Transfer to Poor Nations
  235. The Logic of Consensus and of Extremes
  236. Winter 1988 Daedalus
  237. The Freeze-Dried Brain
  238. The Future of Big Science
  239. Ixmann and the Gavagai
  240. The Grand Protester: Lacan on the Scientific Status of Psychoanalysis
  241. Analogies Hard and Soft
  242. Sexism in Science
  243. The autonomous student
  244. The philosophy of common sense
  245. The wisdom of the eye by Joseph Agassi
  246. Book Reviews : Understanding Cultures, Perspectives in Anthropology and Social Theory. By ROBERT C. ULIN. Austin: University of Texas Press, 1984. Pp. xvii + 200. U.S. $19.95
  247. Whatever Happened to the Positivist Theory of Meaning
  248. Rationality: The Critical View
  249. A Study in Westernization
  250. The Problem of the Rationality of Magic
  251. The Rationality of Irrationalism
  252. Magic and Rationality Again
  253. The Rationality of Dogmatism
  254. Methodological Individualism and Institutional Individualism
  255. Theories of Rationality
  256. The Choice of Problems and the Limits of Reason
  257. Twenty Years After
  258. Comment on Sagal
  259. Reviews
  260. Naturalistic Epistemology: The Case of Abner Shimony
  261. Comment on Levine
  262. Book Reviews : Thinking Matter: Materialism in Eighteenth-Century Britain. BY JOHN W. YOLTON. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1984. Pp. xiv + 238. $29.50 (cloth), $12.95 (paper
  263. Indexes, Footnotes and Problems
  264. III. Refutation a la Popper: A rejoinder
  265. I. God save us from our friends; Enemies we have no more
  266. Dignity in the workplace can work be dealienated?
  267. The Politics of Science
  268. The Politics of Science
  269. Scientific Leadership
  270. Der Computer als Werkzeug zum Diagnostizieren
  271. A Note on Smith's Term "Naturalism"
  272. The Computer as a Diagnostic Tool in Medicine
  273. Towards a Canonic Version of Classical Political Theory
  274. Popper in basic English
  275. Book Reviews : Popper and After: Four Modern Irrationalists. BY DAVID STOVE. New York: Pergamon Press, 1981. Pp. viii + 116. $9.50 paper
  276. Comments by Joseph Agassi
  277. The myth of the young genius
  278. Panel discussion
  279. The Unity of Hume's Thought
  280. Training to survive the hazard called education
  281. II. Nationalism and the philosophy of Zionism
  282. III. The cheapening of science∗
  283. The Social Base of Scientific Theory and Practice
  284. The computer as a diagnostic tool in medicine
  285. Communication: A holomechanical model for research in the life sciences
  286. The Structure of the Quantum Revolution
  287. What We Can Learn From Other Animals
  288. Science and Society: Studies in the Sociology of Science Joseph Agassi Robert S. Cohen Marx W. Wartofsky
  289. Worker Productivity: Myths and Reality.
  290. Book Review: Essential Perplexities, An Inaugural LectureEssential Perplexities, An Inaugural Lecture. By NeedhamRodney. Oxford: The Clarendon Press, 1978. Pp. 30. £0.95.
  291. Book Review: The Quest for Self-DeterminationThe Quest for Self-Determination. By RonenDov. New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1979. Pp. xiv + 144. $17.50.
  292. Book Review: Equality of the Rights of WomenEquality of the Rights of Women. By WolgastElizabeth H.. Ithaca and London: Cornell University Press, 1980. Pp. 176. $12.50.
  293. Psychiatry as Medicine
  294. Trends in 20th Century Psychotherapy
  295. Summary and Conclusions
  296. The Rise of Scientific Psychotherapy
  297. Contemporary Schools of Psychopathology
  298. Conclusion
  299. Introduction
  300. This Message is for You. Maybe
  301. Generalism vs. Externalism: The Concept of Disease
  302. Soziotechnik und Qualität des Arbeitslebens von Frauen
  303. Joseph Agassi on Polanyi's Philosophy of Science
  304. The Economics of Sex Differentials
  305. Irrationalism Today
  306. The death of heuristic?
  307. On Middle-aged Women
  308. The Detective Novel and Scientific Method
  309. Presuppositions for Logic
  310. Family Women, and Socialization in the Kibbutz.
  311. How Technology Aids and Impedes the Growth of Science
  312. Simulation?
  313. Psychoanalysis as a human science: A comment
  314. Book reviews and critical studies
  315. Science and Society
  316. Science and Society
  317. To Save Verisimilitude
  318. Externalism
  319. Scientific Philosophy Today
  320. Genius in Science
  321. The Logic of Scientific Inquiry
  322. Was Wittgenstein Really Necessary?
  323. Scientific Schools and their Success
  324. Sociologism in Philosophy of Science
  325. The Autonomy of Science
  326. Between Metaphysics and Methodology
  327. The Ideological Import of Newton
  328. Research Project
  329. Max Weber’s Scientific Religion
  330. Storage and Communication of Knowledge
  331. Revising the Referee System
  332. Cultural Lag in Science
  333. The Legitimation of Science
  334. The Choice of Scientific Problems
  335. On Pursuing the Unattainable
  336. The Economics of Scientific Publications
  337. Standards to Live by
  338. Scientists as Sleepwalkers
  339. Technocracy and Scientific Progress
  340. Scientists as Sleepwalkers
  341. Standards to Live By
  342. Revising the Referee System
  343. Between Metaphysics and Methodology
  344. Genius in Science
  345. Technocracy and Scientific Progress
  346. Externalism
  347. Max Weber’s Scientific Religion
  348. On Pursuing the Unattainable
  349. Was Wittgenstein Really Necessary?
  350. Research Project
  351. The Legitimation of Science
  352. Cultural Lag in Science
  353. The Autonomy of Science
  354. Molecular Phylogenetics: Biological Parsimony and Methodological Extravagance
  355. The Problems of Scientific Validation
  356. Faith has Nothing to do with Rationality
  357. Rationality and the Tu Quoque Argument
  358. The Methodology of Research Projects: A Sketch
  359. Faith has Nothing to do with Rationality
  360. Epistemology as an Aid to Science
  361. Introduction: Science in its Social Setting
  362. Revolutions in Science, Occasional or Permanent?
  363. Three Views of the Renaissance of Science
  364. What Makes for a Scientific Golden Age?
  365. On Explaining the Trial of Galileo
  366. The Present State of the Philosophy of Science
  367. Continuity and Discontinuity in the History of Science
  368. Sir John Herschel’s Philosophy of Success
  369. The Origins of the Royal Society
  370. I. The Place of Sparks in the World of Blah∗
  371. Sociologism in Philosophy of Science
  372. Epistemology as an Aid to Science
  373. Revolutions in Science, Occasional or Permanent?
  374. What Makes for a Scientific Golden Age?
  375. Scientific Schools and Their Success
  376. Introduction: Science in Its Social Setting
  377. Continuity and Discontinuity in the History of Science
  378. The Economics of Scientific Publications
  379. On Explaining the Trial of Galileo
  380. Storage and Communication of Knowledge
  381. Sir John Herschel’s Philosophy of Success
  382. Rationality and the Tu Quoque Argument
  383. The Logic of Scientific Inquiry
  384. The Choice of Scientific Problems
  385. Three Views of the Renaissance of Science
  386. The Origins of the Royal Society
  387. The Present State of the Philosophy of Science
  388. The Ideological Import of Newton
  389. The Methodology of Research Projects: A Sketch
  390. THE RATIONALITY OF IRRATIONALISM
  391. A Cognitive Theory of Religion [and Comments and Reply]
  392. Between Science and Technology
  393. Stegmüller squared
  394. The Rationality of Discovery
  395. The Legacy of Lakatos
  396. Review Symposium : Douglas W. Hands G. C. Archibald Joseph Agassi On S. J. Latsis, ed. Method and Appraisal in Economics. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1976. Pp. viii + 218. $17.50 The Methodology of Economic Research Programmes
  397. Wissenschaft und Metaphysik
  398. Movies Seen Many Times
  399. Knowledge and error
  400. Liberal Forensic Medicine
  401. Work and Technology
  402. Review
  403. The ideological import of Newton
  404. In Defense of Standardized On-Demand Publication
  405. WILLIAMS DODGES AGASSI'S CRITICISM
  406. The Zeitgeist and Professor Feuer
  407. The Unequal Occupational Distribution of Women in Israel
  408. Evolution, Welfare and Time in Economics: Essays in Honor of Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen
  409. Robert Boyle's Anonymous Writings
  410. The methodology of research projects: A sketch
  411. Towards a Rational Philosophical Anthropology
  412. Man as Animal
  413. Man as Machine
  414. Man as Rational
  415. Man as Social
  416. Introduction: Against the Elitism of Excessive Scholarship
  417. Man in the Image of God
  418. Who discovered Boyle's law?
  419. Causality and Medicine
  420. Comment on Pierce's "Review Essay: Philosophy" (Vol. 1, No. 2)
  421. Computer Power and Human Reason: From Judgment to Calculation
  422. Comments and replies
  423. Against method: Outline of an anarchistic theory of knowledge
  424. Verisimilitude: Popper, Miller, and Hattiangadi
  425. Paranoia: A Study in Diagnosis
  426. Assurance and Agnosticism
  427. The Lakatosian Revolution
  428. Conclusion Towards a General Demarcation of Psychopathology
  429. Clinical Matters
  430. Postscript
  431. Psychological Background
  432. Sociological Background
  433. Metaphysical Background
  434. The Paradoxes of Paranoia Revisited
  435. Paranoia as a Fixation of an Abstract System
  436. Introduction: The Paradoxes of Paranoia
  437. Methodological Background
  438. Can Adults Become Genuinely Bilingual?
  439. The problem of universals
  440. Genius in Science
  441. Institutional Individualism
  442. Verisimilitude: Comment on David Miller
  443. Science in Flux
  444. Replies
  445. On Novelty
  446. Modified Conventionalism
  447. Science in Flux
  448. Sensationalism
  449. Imperfect Knowledge
  450. Assurance and Agnosticism
  451. Criteria for Plausible Arguments
  452. Subjectivism: From infantile disease to chronic illness
  453. Positive Evidence as a Social Institution
  454. Testing as a Bootstrap Operation in Physics
  455. When Should we Ignore Evidence in Favour of a Hypothesis?
  456. The Nature of Scientific Problems and their Roots in Metaphysics
  457. Can Religion Go Beyond Reason?
  458. Unity and Diversity in Science
  459. Towards a Theory of Ad Hoc Hypotheses
  460. The Confusion between Physics and Metaphysics in the Standard Histories of Sciences
  461. A Prologue: On Stability and Flux
  462. The Confusion between Science and Technology in the Standard Philosophies of Science
  463. Questions of Science and Metaphysics
  464. Positive Evidence in Science and Technology
  465. Replies to Diane: Popper on Learning from Experience
  466. Dinosaurs and horses, or: Ways with nature
  467. The Future of Berkeley’s Instrumentalism
  468. The last refuge of the scoundrel
  469. The logic of scientific inquiry
  470. Towards a Theory of Openness to Criticism
  471. The Israeli Experience in the Democratization of Work Life
  472. Criteria for Plausible Arguments
  473. Objectivity in the Social Sciences
  474. On Pursuing the Unattainable
  475. Objective knowledge: An evolutionary approach
  476. Assurance and Agnosticism
  477. Continuity and Discontinuity in the History of Science
  478. Magic and Rationality Again
  479. Testing as a bootstrap operation in physics
  480. Rationality and thetu quoqueargument
  481. Imperfect Knowledge
  482. The Interface of Philosophy and Physics Delaware Seminar in the Foundations of Physics, and Quantum Theory and Reality Mario Bunge
  483. SOCIOLOGISM IN PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE
  484. Review Symposium : I—Listening in the Lull
  485. Book Reviews : Cognitive Development and Epistemology. Edited by Theodore Mischel. New York: Academic Press, I97I. Pp. xv+423. $I6.50
  486. Kant's program
  487. Discussion
  488. Positive evidence as a social institution
  489. The standard misinterpretation of skepticism
  490. II—The Mixed Blessings of Technology: Comments on Professor Roberts' Paper
  491. Axiomatization of the Theory of Relativity
  492. Tautology and Testability in Economics
  493. The Grounds of Reason
  494. LETTERS: Babylonian Numbers
  495. Tristram Shandy, Pierre Menard, and all that comments oncriticism and the growth of knowledge∗
  496. Qualifying Exams, Do They Qualify?
  497. The preaching of John Holt
  498. Man Incorporate: The Individual and His Work in an Organized Society
  499. Positive Evidence in Science and Technology
  500. The Worker and the Media
  501. PHILOSOPHY AS LITERATURE: THE CASE OF BORGES
  502. Government Contracting and Technological Change
  503. Leibniz's Place in the History of Physics
  504. CAN RELIGION GO BEYOND REASON?
  505. Changing our background-knowledge
  506. Privileged access
  507. Sir John Herschel's Philosophy of Success
  508. Comments: Theoretical Entities Versus Theories
  509. Understanding and Participant Observation in Cultural and Social Anthropology
  510. Unity and Diversity in Science
  511. Precision in Theory and in Measurement
  512. No more discovery in physics?
  513. The Novelty of Popper’s Philosophy of Science
  514. Sources of Quantum Mechanics. B. L. van der Waerden, Ed. North-Holland, Amsterdam, 1967. 442 pp., illus. $14
  515. The Kirchhoff-Planck Radiation Law
  516. The Problem of the Rationality of Magic
  517. Planning for Success
  518. Planning for Success: A Reply to Professor Wisdom
  519. Science in Flux
  520. The Mystery of the Ravens
  521. Science and Philosophy
  522. I.—SENSATIONALISM
  523. The Confusion between Science and Technology in the Standard Philosophies of Science
  524. The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (review)
  525. The Confusion between Science and Technology in the Standard Philosophies of Science
  526. Variations on the Liar's Paradox
  527. Analogies as Generalizations
  528. Empiricism and inductivism
  529. Logic, Methodology and Philosophy of Science Ernest Nagel Patrick Suppes Alfred Tarski
  530. BETWEEN MICRO AND MACRO
  531. Epistemological Problems of Economics.
  532. Discussion
  533. An Unpublished Paper of the Young Faraday
  534. Methodology of the Social Sciences
  535. The Way Things Are. By P. W. Bridgman. (Harvard University Press. London: Oxford University Press, 1959. Pp. 325. Price 45s.)
  536. Methodological Individualism
  537. [Methodological Prescriptions in Economics]: A Rejoinder
  538. REVIEWS
  539. Methodological Prescriptions in Economics
  540. REVIEWS
  541. CORROBORATION VERSUS INDUCTION
  542. EPISTEMOLOGY AS AN AID TO SCIENCE: COMMENTS ON DR BUCHDAHL'S PAPER
  543. A HEGELIAN VIEW OF COMPLEMENTARITY
  544. KOYRÉ ON THE HISTORY OF COSMOLOGY
  545. DUHEM VERSUS GALILEO
  546. Deconstructing post-modernism: Gellner and Crocodile Dundee
  547. Introduction
  548. Quanta in context
  549. Proof, Probability or Plausibility
  550. Prescriptions for Responsible Psychiatry
  551. Complementarity (1958)
  552. Natural Philosophy (1958)
  553. Werner Heisenberg (1967)
  554. Preface
  555. Introduction
  556. Skepticism
  557. Science
  558. Ethics
  559. Politics
  560. Aesthetics
  561. Conclusion
  562. Glossary
  563. Further Reading
  564. Bibliography
  565. Physics and Ontology (1954)
  566. Determinism and Quantum Mechanics (1954)
  567. A Remark on von Neumann's Proof (1956)
  568. Problems of Microphysics (1962)
  569. Problems of Microphysics (1964)
  570. Peculiarity and Change in Physical Knowledge (1965)
  571. Dialectical Materialism and the Quantum Theory (1966)
  572. In Defence of Classical Physics (1970)
  573. Philosophical Problems of Quantum Theory (1964)
  574. Ludwig Boltzmann, 1844–1906 (1967)
  575. Max Planck, 1858–1947 (1967)
  576. Erwin Schrödinger, 1887–1961 (1967)
  577. The Urgent Need for an Intellectual Revolution: Maxwell's Version
  578. The Philosophy of Social Science from Mandeville to Mannheim
  579. The Concept of Intelligibility in Modern Physics (1948)
  580. Niels Bohr's Interpretation of the Quantum Theory (1961) Rejoinder to Hanson (1961)
  581. About Conservative Traits in the Sciences, and Especially in Quantum Theory, and Their Elimination (1963)
  582. Remarks about the Application of Non-Classical Logics in Quantum Theory (1966)
  583. On the Possibility of a Perpetuum Mobile of the Second Kind (1966)
  584. Excerpts from Discussions with Léon Rosenfeld and David Bohm (and Others) (1957)
  585. Professor Landé on the Reduction of the Wave Packet (1960)
  586. Comments on Grünbaum's “Law and Convention in Physical Theory” (1961)
  587. Comments on Hill's “Quantum Physics and Relativity Theory” (1961)
  588. Review of Alfred Land', Foundations of Quantum-Mechanics: A Study in Continuity and Symmetry, New Haven: Yale University Press, 1955 (1957)
  589. Review of John von Neumann, Mathematical Foundations of Quantum Mechanics, translated from the German edition by Robert T. Beyer, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1955 (1958)
  590. Review of Hans Reichenbach, The Direction of Time, Berkeley–Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1956 (1959)
  591. Review of Norwood R. Hanson, The Concept of the Positron: A Philosophical Analysis, New York: Cambridge University Press, 1963 (1964)
  592. Review of Hans Reichenbach, Philosophic Foundations of Quantum Mechanics, Berkeley–Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1965 (1967)